Without getting into too many details, the last year has been tough for me. As a mental health public speaker, I have resolved to be honest about my mental health challenges, in an effort to encourage people to not be ashamed of their illness. As I began writing this, the sale of my former house was about to close and my family had already settled safely into our new home. We have peace. I have a feeling of immense gratitude these days for the smallest things in life. For example, I remember telling my wife how weird it felt to step outside my new home and not have to worry about being monitored by a neighbour's surveillance camera pointed at my property. It was a strangely wonderful feeling to just live my life in that moment without any concern. That's just one small example.
In the past year, much of my life has been turned upside down by the continual harassment we have endured at the hands of a neighbour, which was allowed to escalate through the inaction of the local police. Now that we have finished the process and broken all physical ties with our former life, I am beginning to pick up where I left off in my own personal pursuits. I am thinking about my creative writing again. I am thinking of new subjects to explore in this blog. I am thinking about reviving my mental health podcast. And I am getting out there again and enjoying myself trackside.
Last Wednesday, after dropping my daughters off at dance class, I did a little shopping and headed to the West Hunt Club Road overpass over the Smiths Falls Subdivision to catch westbound Via Train 59, which passes by this spot every evening at about 6 p.m. I haven't been trackside to catch this train in months, mostly due to the situation I have already noted above.
This was the surprise that awaited me. The flavour-du-jour Via Venture train set they are calling Lumi. It's the train that railfans are trying to catch, as it is the only new Siemens train that has been painted in this predominantly yellow scheme. I have seen some comments online that this train is a subtle tribute to Via's long-gone turbo train, which sported a yellow-and-blue scheme.
I have been waiting for a while to see when Train 59 was going to sport a Venture set, since all the photos I have of this train in the last several years are the usual consist of either P42s and HEP cars or F40s and LRC cars. I was quite shocked and happy to see that my first meet with Train 59 as a Venture set was none other than the yellow comet. It's nice to have good train karma, especially when you're an Ottawa railfan.
The wires couldn't be avoided in this second shot and the sun was shining brightly, so there was a bit of glare to deal with, post shot. As you can see, the train was westbound with the power car leading the way and the locomotive in push mode in the back. No longer will we be seeing many of the old double-enders, where two locomotives bookended a string of LRC or silver streamlined cars. This is the new look of Via Rail, whether you're ready for it or not. Many of the railway's ordered Venture sets have arrived and are now actively plying the rails in the Windsor-Quebec City corridor, although they are more heavily used between Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal, by the looks of it and what I've read online.
One last shot before Train 59 passed under the bridge. I like that I caught the full Via Rail Canada script on the coach, along with the locomotive, which was my real objective. I don't think the asymmetrical application of the Via logo is a winning concept, but it seems to be the way of marketing right now, along with the superfluous use of the letter Q replacing c and k and the maddening use of unnecessary accents in misspelled corporate names. Can you tell I'm an editor?
One Week Later
Daylight is quickly running out to get a decent shot of Via Rail trains on Wednesday evenings, which is why I tried to get out this past Wednesday night to shoot Train 59 again. I went to the same spot on the West Hunt Club Road overpass, as I was not feeling terribly creative to get a different shot. I set up in the same spot, wondering what Via was using for its equipment. Once again, it was a Venture set heading west toward Fallowfield Station.
It wasn't Lumi, but it was the first time I saw Train 59 using a conventional Venture set. I'm sure this conversion from older equipment happened a while ago, but this is the first time I have seen this change in person. I guess I'm making up for lost time, as I have not been making a lot of observations in Ottawa lately. The lights on the power car were a bit blinding as it rounded the curve, so many of my photos did not turn out from where I was perched on the overpass.
Next time I shoot this train, I will find a new spot where the headlights won't be such an obstacle. But for last night, I was reasonably happy with this shot. I suppose the novelty of shooting Venture sets will wear off soon. For the moment, it was enough for me to be trackside, without any worries.
I was just enjoying life. That's the way it should be.
10 comments:
Wouldn’t it be cool if VIA painted some of their other Venture train sets in retro and heritage liveries? Like the CN green, black and gold. The Rapido. The CN Tempos, with the red and white locomotives. Or CP’s streamlined silver with red stripes and a Multimark. You’d have something new to photograph every week!
Great to hear your good news, Michael. Here's to life!
VIA is all Venture in the Ottawa-Montreal-Quebec City triangle. Overall, about to be 12 of 28 Corridor consists. The fulcrum is about to tip and flip to full Venture soon!
Some of the ol' days we will treasure, and some not so much!
Eric
You had great luck on your first outing!
Perhaps it’s a sign of the sun coming out again in your personal life. I’m glad you feel well enough to get back to the things you love. Looking forward to seeing more of this!
Is it VIA’s intent to replace all corridor trains with Charger/Venture trainsets? If so, what becomes of all the recently refurbished LRC coaches? I read through their website and their latest strategic plan. It’s all very vague. The only thing they made clear is that they can’t expand corridor service without getting more timeslots from Metrolinx (GO Transit, UPX) at Union Station. Everyone loves new trains and new stations, but corridor frequencies and travel times are pretty much the same as they were when VIA started in 1978. The only real improvement is between Ottawa and Kingston, where most of the trips back then were bus connections.
Thanks for the comments, gents. I like the idea of more heritage schemes on the new Via Rail Ventures, but if I had it my way, the next heritage scheme would bet he original Via blue and yellow. That would be a blast. The look of the corridor is certainly changing, but I like Kevin's point that, without actual time and train frequency improvements, having shiny new trains isn't all that much of an actual change for some people.
Kevin: Yes, VIA is replacing all the Corridor equipment with Ventures. First went the Rens, then the number of HEP and LRC consists is slowly sliding away. The current score is: Ventures 12, LRC 11, HEP 5. Metrolinx is already delaying many VIA trains in and out of Toronto...I have to wonder how many on an average day. Meanwhile, VIA only uses two or three tracks under that whole big train shed, often positioning consists behind each other to save space. I do, however, think there are a lot more frequencies than back in 1978. Sometimes three per hour past here!
Michael: I stand at the Kingston station and watch people boarding. This past weekend the demographic was post-secondary. Aside from some specific feature that has changed (noise level, seat placement vs. windows) I bet 99% of first-time riders, and even 40% of regular riders don't notice what kind of train they're boarding.
Eric
I agree with your point Eric. Most people will not notice what train they are taking, as long as it gets them where they want to go. The percentage of university and college students on the train will never change, I imagine. I guess my point, and that of Kevin as well, is that without tangible time improvements and train frequency (i.e. - new routes, new times, new choices between big cities), the new trains won't move the needle for most riders, as you point out.
Just for fun, I did a little bit of research to compare VIA’s corridor services, then and now. I know there’s a 1978 timetable on the Internet somewhere, because I’ve seen it before. But the first timetable that popped up was from October 1982. That’s 42 years ago, so I thought it would make a good ‘then’ benchmark. For ‘now’, I plugged October 24th into VIA’s online system. In 1982 there were 41 weekday corridor round trips, plus 2 that were VIA chartered buses. In 2024 there are 33 weekday corridor round trips, all by train. Cuts have been heaviest west of Toronto. Back in 1982, VIA ran trains that started in Toronto with endpoints in Brockville, Stratford and Kingston. Those are all gone. There were 5 round trips per day between Toronto and London, some using the Great Western route and some using the Grand Trunk route. Plus the through trains from Windsor (6) and Sarnia (3). So if you lived in London, you had a choice of 14 round trips per day to Toronto on two different routes. Almost European! Now, maybe my bifocals are playing tricks on me, but when I counted the number of round trips on October 24, 2025 between Toronto and Ottawa, I spotted 10. That doesn’t seem consistent, but I double and triple checked. Would one of you like to double check and tell me if I misread something? …..
….. Here’s the detailed breakdown. First number is 1982. Second number is 2024. Toronto/Montreal (7,6) – Toronto/Windsor (6,4) – Toronto/Sarnia (3,1) – Toronto/London (5,1) – Toronto/Stratford (1,0) – Toronto/Niagara Falls (3,1) – Toronto/Ottawa (3,10) Note: In 1982 there were also 2 VIA chartered buses between Kingston and Ottawa. Toronto/Kingston (1,0) – Toronto/Brockville (1,0) – Montreal/Quebec City (5,5) – Montreal/Ottawa (6,5)
Thanks for posting about your work on your mental health and life changes. As someone who has been working on my own in the last year or so, I completely appreciate it and it feels good to know that it's not a lonely road in making changes and being comfortable in your own skin. You have a great honey blog here that helps the local railfanning community (not like we have much to talk about in the Ottawa area but every bit helps!) And beyond but at the end of the day we all live full lives with that connection of the hobby.
Also super lucky on that VIA catch!!!! Looking at it, I completely get Turbo Train!
Well second thought was Jason Shron must love this lol. Anyway fun to see that these rare and exciting catches are even still possible here and makes me want to try to get out trackside before the snow flies (admittedly been slacking lately).
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